Wednesday Giveaway – Eye Candy goes to Connee!

This week’s winner will be able to make a sweet foundation paper pieced block inspired by Ruby Star Society’s new collection Eye Candy! The giveaway comes with the Eye Candy Mini Charm Pack and FPP sheet to make an 8″ block that will be a wonderful addition to small projects such as a patchwork duffle or handbag.

I’ll be back with another Giveaway next Wednesday. Until then you can shop for all sorts of sewing notions, books, and other fun stuff at pieceocake.com!

A Simple Hand Sewing Needle Guide

Have you made one of these cute needle caddies yet? If not, you can find the FREE ePattern for the Big Needle Caddy at pieceocake.com, While you are there, you might be interested in the other FREE ePatterns. But you don’t have to make a needle caddy to be interested in knowing more about hand sewing needles.

I am careful to pair a needle with the kind of sewing I am doing, and the thread that goes with it. Since I do a variety of kinds of stitching, I like to have a variety of needles to choose from with me when sitting down to sew. This is how I filled my own needle caddy.

First, you need to identify each needle so that when you need more, you know which package to choose. Cut a strip of paper to write the needle particulars on, grab a pen or pencil, and gather your needles. Which needles, you ask? Why… these needles!

  • #9 Crewel Needle by Bohin: This is a very versatile needle with a long eye and strong body. Use it with wool thread, perle cotton, and 30-40 wt cotton thread. Great for embroidery, big stitch hand quilting, and some hand sewing.
  • #9 Piecing Needle by Tulip: An all-purpose needle good for a variety of hand sewing jobs, especially hand piecing. This needle is a little long, with a sturdy shaft. If you have trouble handling smaller needles, this and the crewel needle above might be good choices.

The next four needles will work better with fine thread like Superior’s 50wt/2-ply thread that only comes on prewound bobbins. Presencia’s 60wt/2-ply thread, Aurifil’s 80wt, and Aurifil’s 50wt/2-ply thread are also good choices with these needles.

  • #10 Big Eye Appliqué Needle by Tulip: Tulip applique needles are smaller and finer than their size number would indicate. The big eye on this needle makes it easier to thread. It is longer than #11, but not as long as a milliner’s needle.
  • #12 Black Gold Appliqué Needle by Clover: This needle is tempered and honed to a very sharp point. It is rigid, not bendy. I get a very nice, small stitch with this needle.
  • #11 Appliqué Needle by Tulip: Very much like the previous needle, but this one is more flexible. I use them interchangeably except that sometimes my fingers have a preference. I don’t know why, but that’s true.
  • #12 Gold-Eye Appliqué Needle by Clover: This is a very nice, affordable, serviceable needle that you can count on. And I did mention… affordable.

Note that when the package says “appliqué” needle, it is often a sharp. A sharp is a needle most often associated with hand sewing. It could also be a longer milliner’s needle which is associated with hat making. Look close and the package will probably tell you which it is.

One of the best features of this needle caddy are the little pockets, shown in the photo above. Mine pockets hold round wooden toothpicks, Leather ThimblePads, and 1-2 flat needle threaders like Roxane’s RX Needle Threaders

Each caddy has two bamboo felt “pages”. My 2nd page holds needles I use less often. Any of the first three listed below would be good with strands of embroidery floss.

These are applique needles that I sometimes use:

  • #11 SuperGlide by Colonial: I almost never use this needle. It’s bigger than my preferred appliqué needles, but not as big as the #9 piecing. It is easy to thread!
  • #12 Appliqué Needle by Mary Arden: This is an excellent, inexpensive needle. The eye is kind of big which is not a bad thing. The needle is a good size, fine, and sharp.

There are two more little inside pockets inside the back page on the other side. I will add a Domed Under Thimble with adhesive pads in one of them.

Click the names of individual needles above to find them on my site or go to Everything In My Needle Caddy, to find them all.

There are lots of good needles out there, these are the ones I use most. And I still recommend Sewing Needle Guide for Hand Stitching by Laura Wasilowski for a more complete and easy-to-slip-in-your-bag needle guide.

Wednesday Giveaway – Something Sharp!

This week’s giveaway, a package of Bohin’s #9 Sharps, goes to Kareny. Sharps are often labeled as applique needles, usually in smaller sizes. This size 9 needle is perfect for general sewing, hand piecing, and English paper piecing. 

Bohin’s Sharps Needles are strong, durable needles that resist bending. These needles feature a finely honed point to minimize fabric damage. Bohin uses a unique polishing process on the needle’s eye, reducing thread breakage and helping the needle glide smoothly through fabric.

I’ll be back with another Giveaway next Wednesday. Until then you can shop for all sorts of sewing notions, books, and other fun stuff at pieceocake.com!

Wednesday Giveaway!

This week’s giveaway is going to Renee Grandinetti – a pack of 5 Schmetz Universal Needles from my personal stash. I’m also including a detailed instruction booklet. For the practical minded!

I’ll be back with another Giveaway next Wednesday. Until then you can shop for all sorts of sewing notions, books, and other fun stuff at pieceocake.com!

Use clamps to keep the weight of the quilt off of your table…

In case you missed it in the past, this is the DIY clamping system I use to support the weight of a quilt as I machine quilt.

I first got the idea from Caryl Bryer Fallert-Gentry. The idea is to use two quick-release clamps suspended from the ceiling to hold the weight of the quilt off of the table while you work. Here are the supplies you need:

  • 2 quick-release ratcheting clamps. Don’t get regular clamps with springs—they are hard on your hands.
  • 2 plastic spring toggle for coats—that’s what those yellow things are
  • Several yards of nylon cord—the kind you would use in a Roman shade (not shown) 
  • 2 big, eye-bolts or hooks for the ceiling. If you can’t screw them into wood, use ones with a toggle.

This is an eyebolt in my ceiling. There is wood above the sheetrock in my studio. If there wasn’t, I’d use eyebolts and butterfly toggles.

Cut a length of nylon cord twice the length from your tabletop to the ceiling. That will be too long, but you can cut off the excess later. Squeeze a jacket toggle open and run one end of the nylon cord through it and then up through the eye-bolt in the ceiling. Run it back through the squeezed-open toggle.

Squeeze a jacket toggle open and run one end of the nylon cord through it and then up through the eye-bolt in the ceiling. Run it back through the squeezed-open toggle.

Tie one end of the nylon cord to one handle of a quick-release clamp. My clamps came with holes that were perfect for this. You might have to drill a hole.

To raise or lower the clamp, squeeze the toggle and pull the other end of the cord. As you use the clamps, you will figure out how much of the excess nylon cord you want to cut off. I like to be able to reach it from a sitting position.

My BERNINA Q20 sits in a table, front to back, not side-to-side like a home machine. My eye-bolts are positioned in the ceiling about 30″ apart, centered over the machine—one on one side, one on the other. They sit back from the front of the table about 12″.

If you machine quilt on a home machine, position one bolt in the ceiling, about 12″ behind the needle. Position the other eyebolt 14″-16″ to the left of the needle (in the ceiling). 

It is fast and easy to change the position of the clamps as you move and turn the quilt. The more you work with the clamps, the easier it is to know where best to clamp the quilt.

When I’m not using the clamps, I pull them up to the ceiling, coiled excess cord, and clamp it in place.

So there you have it! This is an inexpensive and simple way to support and control your quilt as you machine quilt. I hope you have as much success with this as I have!

Wednesday Giveaway goes to Susan Carroll!

We sell a 20″ x 22″ piece of Bamboo/Rayon Felt Blend in our store for making Applique Caddies (folder used to carry or store your applique blocks once you take them off the design wall) AND to use inside a Needle Caddy. The piece at the end of the bolt is rarely exactly this size, so we have several irregular pieces for this week’s giveaway.

I’ll be back with another Giveaway next Wednesday. Until then you can shop for all sorts of sewing notions, books, and other fun stuff at pieceocake.com!